Nokia said its chief operating officer will leave the telecom network equipment maker, which is struggling in the face of a shrinking market and tough competition, after just eight months in the job. COO Monika Maurer will be replaced by Joerg Erlemeier, currently a senior vice president for Nokia Transformation, effective immediately, the Finnish company said on Monday. Maurer was promoted to group COO in April, from COO of fixed networks, after Nokia's head of mobile networks Samih Elhage announced his departure from the company and the group said it would break out services as a distinct business group from mobile networks.

Nokia said its chief operating officer will leave the telecom network equipment maker, which is struggling in the face of a shrinking market and tough competition, after just eight months in the job. COO Monika Maurer will be replaced by Joerg Erlemeier, currently a senior vice president for Nokia Transformation, effective immediately, the Finnish company said on Monday. Maurer was promoted to group COO in April, from COO of fixed networks, after Nokia's head of mobile networks Samih Elhage announced his departure from the company and the group said it would break out services as a distinct business group from mobile networks.

The text message turned 25 Sunday, and in its quarter century of life, the medium has proven a critical and influential force, particularly on Wall Street. Since Vodafone Group Plc (ADR) (NASDAQ: VOD ) ...

The Nokia 8 is already one of 2017’s most exciting handsets, representing the return of the Finnish brand to the smartphone market. With Android 8.0 Oreo now rolling out to the flagship handsets, let’s take a look at three of the new features that Oreo offers the Nokia 8.

HELSINKI/TORONTO (Reuters) - An arbitration court ordered smartphone pioneer BlackBerry Ltd to pay $137 million to Nokia to settle a payment dispute and the Canadian company said it would pursue a separate patent infringement case against the Finnish firm. The International Court of Arbitration ruled earlier this week that BlackBerry had failed to make certain payments to Nokia under a patent licence contract, BlackBerry said on Friday.

HELSINKI/TORONTO (Reuters) - An arbitration court ordered smartphone pioneer BlackBerry Ltd to pay $137 million to Nokia to settle a payment dispute and the Canadian company said it would pursue a separate patent infringement case against the Finnish firm. The International Court of Arbitration ruled earlier this week that BlackBerry had failed to make certain payments to Nokia under a patent licence contract, BlackBerry said on Friday.

BlackBerry Ltd. said Friday the International Chamber of Commerce's court of arbitration ruled against it in its contract dispute with Nokia Corp. . The dispute related to whether certain payments that ...

Juniper Networks (JNPR) tumbled to the bottom of the S&P 500 today after reports that Nokia was interested in purchasing the company were rebutted by Nokia itself. Juniper Networks dropped 5.9% to$27.76, while the S&P 500 rose 0.8% to 2647.58. Raymond James analyst Simon Leopold and team explain what happened: After the market close, CNBC reported on speculation that Nokia would acquire Juniper Networks, but within hours, Nokia, which usually does not respond to such speculation, said, “Ehei”, which is Finnish for “Nope.” The CNBC report suggested Nokia would offer $16 billion, or about $42 per share, more than 40% above today’s close.

UPDATE: Since this story was published, Nokia has released a statement saying it is not in talks to buy Juniper. Shares of Juniper Networks Inc. soared Wednesday after a report that it is in talks to be acquired by Finnish infotech giant Nokia Corp. The Sunnyvale company's stock rose almost 20 percent in after-hours trading after CNBC reported that the sale to Nokia would value Juniper at around $16 billion.

Nokia notes that it doesn’t typically comment on rumors such as this, but felt that it need to because of how specific the rumors are. The reports of a potential deal between Nokia and Juniper Networks, Inc. came from CNBC. Nokia’s statement regarding the news will likely put an end to discussions about a takeover offer for Juniper Networks, Inc. Companies normally don’t comment on market matters like this, which is the route that Juniper Networks, Inc. took when it was asked about the possible takeover.

Juniper Networks (NYSE: JNPR) took investors on a roller-coaster ride in after-hours trading on Wednesday following a CNBC report that Nokia (NYSE: NOK) was planning to buy it for $16 billion -- about ...